Joshua Mohr - All This Life

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All This Life: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Morning rush hour on the Golden Gate Bridge. Amidst the river of metal and glass a shocking event occurs, leaving those who witnessed it desperately looking for answers, most notably one man and his son Jake, who captured the event and uploaded it to the internet for all the world to experience. As the media swarms over the story, Jake will face the ramifications of his actions as he learns the perils of our modern disconnect between the real world and the world we create on line.
In land-locked Arizona, as the entire country learns of the event, Sara views Jake’s video just before witnessing a horrible event of her own: her boyfriend’s posting of their intimate sex tape. As word of the tape leaks out, making her an instant pariah, Sara needs to escape the small town’s persecution of her careless action. Along with Rodney, an old boyfriend injured long ago in a freak accident that destroyed his parents’ marriage, she must run faster than the internet trolls seeking to punish her for her indiscretions. Sara and Rodney will reunite with his estranged mother, Kat, now in danger from a new man in her life who may not be who he — or his online profiles — claim to be, a dangerous avatar in human form.
With a wide cast of characters and an exciting pace that mimics the speed of our modern, all-too-connected lives, All This Life examines the dangerous intersection of reality and the imaginary, where coding and technology seek to highlight and augment our already flawed human connections. Using his trademark talent for creating memorable characters, with a deep insight into language and how it can be twisted to alter reality, Joshua Mohr returns with his most contemporary and insightful novel yet.

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He could also see the note he left her, Make sure my sister eats this, okay?

He opened up the vodka bottle and had a huge swig.

He fished his laptop from his bag and lay down on the couch. In her spot.

He watched the video clip many times. It’s all that he had left.

Noah911 made another hurtful and necessary click on replay.

Taking it all in another time.

As the video started, Noah didn’t see anything treacherous. They were normal people playing instruments.

Until the moment they weren’t.

7

Sara would be lying if she didn’t acknowledge a certain pleasure in Hank’s impulsive and violent reaction to Felix kicking her car. It was beautiful medicine, watching her brother being protective of her. Especially after the sex tape. Especially after being suspended from the restaurant. Especially after hearing Felix cussing and screaming at her and bringing a boot to her car. She needed to know there was someone alive who would defend her, someone who cared for Sara even when she couldn’t fathom caring about herself.

That was Hank. Her brother was stunning in his simplicity. He had no mind to do anything he didn’t feel like. Hank would hit the gym religiously. He’d go to work when he had to. Besides those actions, he sat around watching MMA clips and drinking beer and doing pushups and playing darts in his room. A sound that Sara associated with a cruel lullaby. She tried to sleep through it nightly, each dart’s thwunk into the board, the rip as Hank pulled it back out. So often she lay there staring at the cinderblocks, counting thwunk s and rips, thwunk s and rips.

Yet Hank could get his ire up fast. So when she came in the house four minutes ago and found him at the kitchen table cutting his fingernails, he looked up and witnessed the emergency on her face, the wide-eyed panic, and Hank said, “What happened?” and she leaked the whole story out. Well, not the whole tale exactly. Omitted were some need-to-know details. Redacted were the juiciest morsels. Hank had no investment, Sara figured, in the beginning of her day. His question, “What happened?” really meant Tell me why you seem so upset this instant? and thus she snipped the account to what she deemed the meat of the story, cleaving the fat to the butcher’s floor.

The sex tape, the work suspension, even the fact she sped up the street and almost hit Felix — these were amputated particulars.

Sara’s story was remixed in a way that emphasized the vulgar and unprovoked malice of the road fisherman, Felix going batshit for no reason and Sara scared that he was going to hit her in the face and he kicked her car, Hank, he ruined her mirror, Hank, he damn near took a swing.

“He almost clocked you, huh?” Hank said.

“He lost it.”

“Did he now.”

“I’ve always hated him.”

“Keys,” said Hank.

“Huh?”

“Give me your keys.”

She handed them over and Hank sprinted out, peeled out, and Sara was alone in the kitchen. She is alone now, fixating on the twigs of fingernails on the table. The rusty little clippers next to them. The fingernails in a pile, like dried-out snakes.

Sara experienced what might be considered remorse. Because it wasn’t only Felix down there. Rodney was in the front yard. The last thing she wanted was for him to get hurt.

They’d been so close before his accident. He was her first kiss, her first love. It wasn’t fairy tale romantic or anything, that first time they felt each other’s lips behind 7-Eleven, next to a dumpster. They’d bought Slurpees and were playing pinball and Rodney’s lips were purple from his grape Slurpee, which he refused to drink with a straw, a detail that Sara found wildly strange and endearing. Everyone drank Slurpees with straws, but not Rodney, putting his lips on the cup and taking small sips like it was coffee.

It looked to Sara like purple lipstick. She remembers thinking that: Rodney’s wearing lipstick.

He was so into the game that he made contorted faces, puckering his purple lips as he manned the machine, about to get multi-ball when for the first time ever Sara got turned on — or at least the first time she could remember. She needed to kiss him. She had a craving for a kiss that had to happen right that second, no matter the setting or their sugared breath or how unreal the temperature was outside, pushing 110˚.

“Come here,” she said, dragging him from the machine.

“Wait, I’ve almost got—”

“Do you want to kiss me?”

His hands immediately fell from the machine, leaving it beeping and chirping and gloating as the silver ball drained down the middle, and Rodney’s purple lips trailed Sara outside the 7-Eleven, into the side alley, with its smell of humid old hot dogs. They stood right by a dumpster teeming with processed foods and right on top was a cardboard cutout of a Nascar driver holding a glistening bottle of beer with a caption that said, “The one and only.”

None of these details derailed Sara’s titanium impulse. She would have this kiss and it would be amazing. She could sense it.

She could also, though, sense that Rodney was nervous, eyes darting all around, fidgeting from foot to foot. He pointed at the cardboard driver and said, “Did you know racecar is a palindrome?”

“What’s a palindrome?”

“Something that’s spelled the same way backward.”

Sara tried spelling racecar the other way in her head, but didn’t care enough to get past the first C, and she said to Rodney, “Kiss me.”

And he did. He put his purple lips on hers. His mouth was cold. She could not only smell grape but chocolate, left over from a donut they split. The kiss lasted about twenty seconds. Then they pulled back and stared at each other.

“Wow,” he said.

“Again,” she said.

They didn’t leave the alley for fifteen more minutes. That Nascar driver watched the whole show.

Which now that Sara thinks about it is a merciless foreshadowing. Because every perv in the world is kicking back with a cold one and watching her sex tape. Every creep on the planet knows that Sara is the one and only girl in the video.

She pulls out her phone and sends Nat this text: Why?

She tries to block out images of Hank pummeling Rodney.

It’s possible that her brother wouldn’t harm him. Hank knows their history. Knows how close they once were.

But when his temper cranks up, Hank isn’t thinking about anything rational.

The feeling in her hands is back. The feeling that she has hands. That she’s aware of having hands. With the sex tape and the suspension and Nat being a total asshole and Felix being mean, Sara’s hands get the vibrating cell phone feeling again; however, it’s worse this time. They feel heavy, like twenty pounds each.

Nat’s not going to answer her text. It’s over. This is his way of breaking up. That’s who she should sic Hank on, her attack dog and protector. At least, Hank has her back. He’ll always defend her. Without her brother looking out, Sara would have no one knocking the monsters away. She’s lucky to have him, even when he frustrates her so much, even when it’s hours of thwunk and rip.

She should make Nat explain it to her, decrypt the teasing why of it. Hank can hold him down and Sara can interrogate. Make her understand precisely why he treated her this way.

There’s no reason not to clip her own fingernails, sitting at the kitchen table. She picks the clippers and only does the pinkie and then she feels a swelling in her hand, like it’s about to burst.

Deep breaths, Sara. Don’t flip out. Don’t lose it. He’s fine. Hank won’t hurt him. He’s only getting even with Felix.

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